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Thread: Aprilia SL750 Shiver

  1. #1
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    Cool Aprilia SL750 Shiver

    Something new and Italian for your enjoyment!

    http://www.motorcycledaily.com/06jun...l750shiver.htm
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  2. #2
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    15th March 2004 - 13:00
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    I'd been waiting for a review of this bike for a while. Would be interested in the factory version...

  3. #3
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    8th August 2004 - 23:11
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    Not my cuppa re looks, but should be a goer from that photo.
    (Thus displaying my extensive bike analysis skills )
    "Not one day that we are here on this earth has been promised to us, so make the most of every day as if it was your last, and every breath ,as if it were the same"

  4. #4
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    Not likely to be under $20K according to distributor and dealer and unlikely to be imported as a result. I'd buy a Tuono if I had to spend that money.

    Edit: Forgot to put in there that I was dead keen the moment I saw the Milan show pictures of the SL, thinking that I might be able to stump up for one in 2008. Hassled the Aprilia dealer and the Distributor to be told the above. Bit of a shame because given its budget aspirations it should be a competitor for the Zed, the Er6, the SV650, the Hornet 600, the GSR600, and the Bandit 650.

    But it isn't.

    Bugger
    Last edited by James Deuce; 8th June 2007 at 20:29.
    If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?



  5. #5
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    12th August 2004 - 09:31
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    Looks disturbingly like a cross between a ER6 and an SV650 N.

    Supposed to go all right and be very easy to ride, but I'd bet on it being a wee bit pricey.

  6. #6
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    i'd test ride it first, but for the money i'd rather a 2nd rsvr
    Then I could get a Kb Tshirt, move to Timaru and become a full time crossdressing faggot

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim2 View Post
    Not likely to be under $20K according to distributor and dealer and unlikely to be imported as a result. I'd buy a Tuono if I had to spend that money.
    Bugger the Tuono, I'd have enough for the Buell XB12STT and the pillion seat kit

    It IS dead sexy though/

    40, here I come!!
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  8. #8
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    COOL!

    I was just thinking today that 750cc is the perfect size for a sporting twin.

    Buy one from the UK or US for 15k then import yerself.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fumeux View Post

    Buy one from the UK or US for 15k then import yerself.
    The days where that saved you money are well and truly gone. The US version will ending costing quite a bit more because you need to replace the headlight unit as it dips the wrong way. It looks like it will be between 5500 and 5999 pounds in the UK. By the time you ship it here and register it, you may as well have bought a Tuono or a KTM Super Duke
    http://www.onyerbike.net/aprilia/shiverinfo.pdf

    http://www.onyerbike.net/aprilia/shivertech.pdf

    Still a bit keen though. I really like the styling.
    If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?



  10. #10
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    Good to see another manufacturer getting into the mid-size twin market.
    Finally I will have something to compare the F800 against i.e. a mid-sized euro twin. Shit a brick, a BEARS mid-size race class might suit me! Do they have such a class already?
    Aprilia's design brief must have read very similar to the F800;- mid sized twin, with long service intervals, economical, functional and easy to ride blah blah.
    The Aprilia PR spin is a bit over the top though. "Once again an Aprilia twin sets new technology and performance standards in its class" Not sure how they measured that? Admittedly the beemer is 50cc more.
    BMW 97hp at the crank 183kg dry
    Shiver 95hp at the crank 189kg dry
    Atleast now the magazines will be able to advance to a two bike comparo.
    There has been a Guzzi 750 twin about for years but you don't see or hear anything of them???
    Happiness is a means of travel, not a destination

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by MD View Post
    There has been a Guzzi 750 twin about for years but you don't see or hear anything of them???
    That would be the Breva. Nowhere near as much HP as the Beemer or the Aprilia.
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim2 View Post
    Not likely to be under $20K according to distributor and dealer and unlikely to be imported as a result.
    Sheeesh, too much. It's a shame because the market for "street" 600's that are a notch above the SV650/ER6 first-bike-after-my-250 is just starting to look interesting.

    Mind you, it costs about the same as a Buell...

    Dave
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  13. #13
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    30th September 2004 - 20:08
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    tits and ass

    http://www.apriliashiver.com/

    Great website though!
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  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim2 View Post
    Not likely to be under $20K according to distributor and dealer and unlikely to be imported as a result.
    5500 - 6000 quid works out on todays exchange rate to be around $15,000 kiwi. I guess all those carbon credits in importing are working against us. That, or someone is out to make a shitload of money importing other bikes into the country.

    And speaking of exchange rates, the Hyosungs shot up about 500 due to a poor exchange rate last year. Now that the dollar is around 75 us cents, how come the prices haven't dropped?
    'I always have coffee when I watch radar, everyone knows that' - Lord Dark Helmet -

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  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by YLWDUC View Post
    5500 - 6000 quid works out on todays exchange rate to be around $15,000 kiwi. I guess all those carbon credits in importing are working against us. That, or someone is out to make a shitload of money importing other bikes into the country.

    And speaking of exchange rates, the Hyosungs shot up about 500 due to a poor exchange rate last year. Now that the dollar is around 75 us cents, how come the prices haven't dropped?
    Everyone seems to forget that the tyranny of distance and a small population tend to make limited number imports (which a 750 twin with basic suspension and no fairing will necessarily be in NZ) an uneconomic proposition for the distributor. NZers buy bikes on ego more than anything else.

    You're only looking at the exchange rate. You're ignoring shipping, GST, Duty, Compliance (it would have to be done as a special I would imagine), and registration. It all adds up really quickly.

    The Hyosungs have stayed up because the sales figures stayed the same and the dealers are making about 1% more on a sale. Bike sales margins on new stock are miserable the world over.
    If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?



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